Paracrine WNT5A signaling inhibits expansion of tumor-initiating cells

  • Nicholas Borcherding
  • , David Kusner
  • , Ryan Kolb
  • , Qing Xie
  • , Wei Li
  • , Fang Yuan
  • , Gabriel Velez
  • , Ryan Askeland
  • , Ronald J. Weigel
  • , Weizhou Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

52 Scopus citations

Abstract

It is not well understood how paracrine communication between basal and luminal cell populations in the mammary gland affects tumorigenesis. During ErbB2-induced mammary tumorigenesis, enriched mammary stem cells that represent a subpopulation of basal cells exhibit enhanced tumorigenic capacity compared with the corresponding luminal progenitors. Transcript profiling of tumors derived from basal and luminal tumor-initiating cells (TIC) revealed preferential loss of the noncanonical Wnt ligand WNT5A in basal TIC-derived tumors. Heterozygous loss of WNT5A was correlated with shorter survival of breast cancer patients. In a mouse model of ErbB2-induced breast cancer, Wnt5a heterozygosity promoted tumor multiplicity and pulmonary metastasis. As a TGFβ substrate, luminal cell-produced WNT5A induced a feed-forward loop to activate SMAD2 in a RYK and TGFβR1-dependent manner to limit the expansion of basal TIC in a paracrine fashion, a potential explanation for the suppressive effect of WNT5A in mammary tumorigenesis. Our results identify the WNT5A/RYK module as a spatial regulator of the TGFβ-SMAD signaling pathway in the context of mammary gland development and carcinogenesis, offering a new perspective on tumor suppression provided by basal-luminal cross-talk in normal mammary tissue.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1972-1982
Number of pages11
JournalCancer research
Volume75
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - May 15 2015

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